Become a Member
The Jewish Chronicle

Review: England People Very Nice

Brave, refreshing, politically incorrect

February 19, 2009 10:34
Sacha Dhawan, Michelle Terry (centre) and Sophie Stanton in the controversial England People Very Nice

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

2 min read

This is the play about which the National Theatre’s Nicholas Hytner said he felt as if he was treading on eggshells. And judging by the complaints accusing Richard Bean of writing a racist play, you can see why.

For the complainants, some of whom are today due to meet Hytner to deliver their grievances, Bean’s crime appears to have been to use racial and cultural stereotypes for his history lesson on immigration in Bethnal Green. On top of which, Hytner’s production glories in old fashioned East End rude irreverence and sets much of the action against Pete Bishop’s Pythonesque animation.

The influx of humanity begins with the French Huguenots’ arrival in 17th-century Spitalfields and ends nearly three hours later in the 21st century with second and third generation Muslims sitting at the feet of an Abu Hamza-type imam, who gives a sermon about the evils of “Jew York”.

And in between the Bangladeshis and the Huguenots are the Irish, represented mainly by the incestuous Houlihan family, who are eventually followed by the arrival of Jewish refugees from Russia who, while dancing the hora, break into a song whose chorus is “Oy vey! Oy vey!”. So you can see how one or two people might take exception.